05.04.2013 - Apps For Asia winners featured at Asian Development Bank annual meeting

DELHI, India — May 4, 2013 — ADB and Microsoft Corp. will showcase the Apps For Asia-Redesigning Development Program at the 46th Annual Meeting of the Asian Development Bank (ADB). The program includes concepts for mobile applications that track water usage, consolidate the most sought-after emergency services, monitor medication use among tuberculosis patients and help public transit users plan travel.
The program, supported by regional information technology associations, private-sector technology partners and universities, aims to harness the creative power of hundreds of software developers to create sustainable solutions for the economic, commercial and social benefit of governments, civil society and businesses in the region.

The Apps For Asia program included a series of national developer events in Australia, India, Korea, Malaysia and the Philippines. Of the 100 apps submitted, only the top three from each country are exhibited at the ADB’s 46th annual meeting in Delhi.

“Apps For Asia is a great showcase of the power of technology and the role it can play in fostering social and economic development,” said Bindu N. Lohani, vice president for Knowledge Management and Sustainable Development, ADB. ADB provided guidance on regional economic, social and development priorities to assist and inspire program participants.

“We received an incredible amount of creative and impactful apps over these past few months, which represents the impact we can make in solving the region’s challenges through technology,” said John Cann, director, International Organizations, Microsoft. “With new technologies like cloud services and a range of mobile devices, apps can be developed quickly to reach more people in more ways.”

In addition to insight from the ADB, participants received training and access to Microsoft’s platform, spanning devices and cloud services, which enabled developers to create innovative Windows Azure, Windows 8 and Windows Phone apps. Further, the program helps local developers produce local solutions and foster innovative business models that have a positive impact on their communities.
Here are the 15 finalists that showcased their apps at this year’s ADB annual meeting:

Australia

• Blue Clover revolutionizes the current diabetes management approach by utilizing mobile and cloud to improve the quality of life for the 347 million people affected by diabetes.

• Idex (Grand Domain) allows people to use a single digital identity to access online services, which helps improve security, eases management of directories and provides easier access to end users.

• xMeaning serves as an aid to learning foreign languages by allowing translators to produce a document in a source language and annotate it with translation information to help a learner better understand the context.

India

• Jeevan Pani provides citizens with access to water usage information and allows them to calculate and report their water usage and share it on social networking sites.

• TOTS ensures that tuberculosis patients follow a proper treatment regimen to help cure the disease by managing records and calendars, mapping routes to nearby treatment centers, and taking photos of patients taking their medicine and immediately notifying their doctors and families.

• PathFinder eases the process of planning travel and using local public transportation by identifying the best transportation routes to get to desired locations.

ADB, based in Manila, is dedicated to reducing poverty in Asia and the Pacific through inclusive economic growth, environmentally sustainable growth and regional integration. Established in 1966, it is owned by 67 members — 48 from the region. In 2012, ADB assistance totaled $21.6 billion, including cofinancing of $8.3 billion.

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